American Fire & Marine Ins. Co. v. Seymour

144 So. 775
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 16, 1932
DocketNo. 4389.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 144 So. 775 (American Fire & Marine Ins. Co. v. Seymour) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Fire & Marine Ins. Co. v. Seymour, 144 So. 775 (La. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

McGregor, j.

In the month of July, 1930, the plaintiff appointed the defendant as its local agent in the city of Monroe to solicit and sell insurance of different kinds within certain limits and under certain restrictions. This appointment was made in person by Harry S. Kaufman, Jr., a member and officer of Harry S. Kaufman, Limited, of New Orleans, general agent of the plaintiff in Louisiana. All the details of “planting” the agency were completed before Mr. Kaufman left the city and all necessary stationery and supplies were left with the defendant. Among these supplies were twenty-four blank policies which were bound in a pad with a back or cover with printed instructions on the inside.

This inside page of the covering was filled with printed matter headed with the word “I-M-P-O-R-T-A-N-T,” in large capital letters extending practically across the entire page. Beneath this head and covering nearly the entire page is a list of thirteen' fire-theft risks and of forty-seven liability-property damages-collision risks, which the agent, defendant in this case, could not write “unless authorization in writing for so doing is first had from the Company.” Underneath the entire list there is printed in bold blackface type the following paragraph:

“Do not bind the Company on any risks declined or cancelled by any other insurer un *776 less specific authority in writing for so doing is first obtained from the Home Office.”

Among the list of prohibited liability-property damage-collision risks appears: “Newspaper Delivery (not Mágazine Delivery or rolls of paper used for newsprint).”

The Monroe Morning World had -been carrying liability-property damage-collision insurance on its trucks that were being used daily for newspaper delivery throughout the territory surrounding the city of Monroe withi the Maryland Insurance Company. This company was dissatisfied with this risk, and, on August 2, 1030, canceled out the insurance with the full knowledge of the defendant, and defendant immediately issued two policies of a similar nature on two of the said, trucks without in any manner consulting the home office of the plaintiff: or attempting to secure permission for the issuance of the said policies. These policies were handled by the defendant just as he handled all his business, though he may have deviated somewhat from what the strict rules of the company may have required.

On August 5, 1030, the Monroe Morning World suffered a collision loss on one of the trucks covered by the said policies, which loss was reported to the company’s general agent at New Orleans on August 7, 1930. On August 12, 1930, there was a similar loss on the other truck, which was reported by the defendant to the company’s general agent at New Orleans on the same day. In each case the report could not have reached the office of the general agent until the day following the day on which the report was made.

Knowledge of the issuance and delivery of the two policies did not reach the-plaintiff’s general agent until after the first loss and until about the time of the second loss. The reports of the two losses were handled in the usual way, and, as soon as the policies were examined in connection with the reports of the losses, it was discovered that they were in the class which defendant had no authority to write without special written authority from the home office at Galveston, Tex, A telegram ordering the immediate cancellation of the two policies was sent to the defendant on August 13, 1930, which was couched in the following language: “You have violated specific instructions and have thereby assumed personal liability in writing automobile insurance Monroe Morning World. Cancel policies immediately. Writing.”

This telegram was followed by a letter of the same date which declined to order an adjustment of the losses under the two policies. The policies were, of course, canceled.

Plaintiff refused to pay the losses covered by the two policies, and, on or about April 15, 1931, the Morning World brought two suits against it and secured judgments aggregating the sum of $724.02, which was paid by the plaintiff on October 16,1931.

On November 21, 1931, plaintiff filed this suit against the defendant to recover the said sum of $724.02 which it had been compelled to pay because of the issuance and delivery of the said policies, being the aggregate amount of the two judgments against it.

In its petition the plaintiff outlines the details of its connection with the defendant as its agent in Monroe, and specially alleges the fact that the printed instructions referred to above were placed in his hands and that special attention was called thereto. It then alleges the issuance and delivery of the two policies and that they covered risks that were specially prohibited in the said instructions and that, therefore, the defendant issued and delivered them not only without authority, but contrary to specific instructions given in advance.

It is then alleged that not only did the defendant have no authority to issue the policies, but that they could not have validly or legally been issued without the written authority and consent being first obtained from' the home office at Galveston, Tex., and that no such authority was asked for or given, and. that therefore the policies were issued in direct violation of the instructions given by the» plaintiff to the defendant.

In his answer to plaintiff’s petition the defendant admitted practically all the material allegations relative to the issuance and delivery of the policies and the losses incurred thereunder, but pleaded that in issuing the •policies he acted within his authority. He pleaded further that the plaintiff made no complaint in regard to the said policies until August 13, 1930, after both losses had occurred on August 5 and 12,1930, respectively, and that therefore it was estopped from setting up any want of authority in the defendant to issue the said policies.

It is the contention of the defendant that, prior to his appointment as agent for the plaintiff, he advised its representative who appointed him that he desired to write these very policies now in dispute and that this fact was the moving cause of his accepting the agency, and that this said representative, with full knowledge of the kind and character of the risks, then and there stated that they were acceptable and consented on behalf of the plaintiff that the policies be issued.

On the issues as thus made up the case was tried, and judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiff as prayed for. From that judgment the defendant has appealed.

Before arguing his appeal on the merits in this court, the defendant filed an exception of p.o cause of action based on the following allegation: “That this is a suit brought by a foreign Insurance Company against its local agent to recover for an alleged violation of instructions, in that the said local ag'ent failed to obtain the written consent of the plaintiff company before writing certain poli- *777 des of insurance. That there is no allegation or proof that the said Insurance Company would have refused to have given the said local agent written authority, and accordingly, the -plaintiff fails to show that the violation of said instructions was the cause of the damage herein sued upon, and accordingly, shows no cause of action.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
144 So. 775, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-fire-marine-ins-co-v-seymour-lactapp-1932.